The running back position is having a renaissance. The group atop the position is deeper and more dynamic than any the NFL has witnessed since the LaDainian Tomlinson-led mid-aughts. Finding a matchup nightmare on passing downs is all but a requirement for modern offenses.

So how does this current crop of running backs shape up? Before training camp gets rolling, here's a look at the best 32 running backs heading into the 2018 campaign. The rankings should serve partly as a snapshot of the position, and partly as a projection. These are the players I'd most want on my roster for this season, rookies excluded.

1

Ezekiel Elliott

RB

Cowboys

Power still has a place in NFL offenses. If anything, the league's trend toward spreading the field with speed on both sides of the ball only makes complete, rugged backs like Zeke
more valuable, as undersized defenders bounce off him. The game appears to come easy for Elliott, who is already the league's best pure runner at age 22. There should be another level of play he can reach, and this should be the season he reaches it.

The great ones seem to watch the game from above while they play it. No one creates his own yardage quite like Bell, with his ability to sidestep tacklers or shrug them off. He routinely beats safeties as an outside receiver, with 33 more catches than the next-closest back over the last two years. No other back performs every last aspect of his job -- from short-yardage runs to blocking -- at such a high level with such flourish.

The
Rams helped reverse the trend of top-shelf backs falling on draft day by selecting Gurley 10th overall in 2015, which is an incredible bargain, given that there are two years still left on his rookie deal (including the fifth-year option for 2019). In a passing league, defensive coaches facing the
Rams start their game plans with how to stop Gurley. It didn't help much, as Gurley still led the league in yards from scrimmage and rushing/receiving touchdowns.

I'll never get used to a runner this big who is able to move his feet that fast. Footwork helps make Johnson an extraordinary receiver and a candidate to break any play wide open by cutting against the grain. He's only started 22 games in three seasons, but his legs will be fresh after missing 15 games in 2017 with a wrist injury. The fact that
this guy is ranked fourth shows how strong the top of the position is.

This ranking could look silly a year from now. Like another NOLA legend with no
ceiling, Kamara has a
flow so sick it makes you want to throw your food up. He's stronger than you think, playing heavier than Marshall Faulk or Priest Holmes did in their day. They just don't make running backs like Kamara any more. Matter of fact, they never made them like him before.

It's strange to remember a time when the rap against Shady was that he couldn't handle a big workload. While he still occasionally gives away yardage in search of "SportsCenter," McCoy has evolved into one of the most durable runners of this century, able to improve the players around him.

Freeman occasionally seeks out contact at the expense of gaining more yards, but it's a blast to watch. A fourth-round pick who has proven well-rounded except for his blocking, Freeman is a reminder that scouts often struggle to evaluate a player's motor. No matter the score or the situation, Freeman attacks every rep as if it's his last.

Was it the
Chiefs' scheme or Hunt's ability that led to his rookie season? Yes. Give Hunt room, and he can take any play the distance. While he might not possess the one standout trait that makes the players above special, Hunt does everything asked of him well. Running backs like Hunt, who break tackles inside and catch passes outside, tilt the field, offering more flexibility in play calls and tempo.

Famous for finishing every run at LSU, Fournette appeared to run out of gas at times as a rookie while playing at a heavier weight. His ankle injuries from college also persisted, and he didn't enjoy as many breakaway runs. Still, few runners are more fearsome in short-yardage situations. He should be more prepared to carry an offense in Year 2.

Chris Wesseling has been banging the drum for Ingram as
one of the league's best runners for a while, but the
national recognition didn't catch up until last season. His career would have had a different arc had he landed with a team that favors a true primary running back. Then again, he probably wouldn't be peaking heading into Year 8, four-game suspension to start this season aside.

Blame his 3.5 yards-per-carry mark mostly on the offensive line and a youthful desire to turn every run into a highlight. By the end of last season, Mixon was trusting his blocks, finishing runs and popping off the screen as an elusive runner who is sometimes reminiscent of
Le'Veon Bell and
LeSean McCoy.

Only four running backs have more yards from scrimmage over the last two years, so why does it feel like Gordon could do more? Gordon has everything a running back wants, except a yards-per-carry mark north of 4.0. His college scouting report has been proven wrong regarding nearly all of his weaknesses and some strengths, so there's room to grow if he creates more explosive runs.

It took one start to realize that Cook fell too far in the draft. Third in the league in yards from scrimmage through Week 3 last season, Cook is a north-south runner who showed surprising toughness and an ability to make defenders miss in the hole. His October ACL injury is the only thing preventing him from being ranked higher.

Drake was never a primary back in college, but he played like one in a fiery five-game stretch to end last season. The game tape showed a rare combination of suddenness, power and versatility. He led the league in rushing after Week 13, and only
Alvin Kamara topped Drake in elusive rating last season, according to Pro Football Focus. He practically beat the
Patriots by himself. It's a small sample size, but I'm sold.

Howard is in the wrong era, as a traditional gliding power back without great receiving skills. Easy to imagine Howard as a star of the 1970s. It remains to be seen how Howard's role changes now that John Fox's 1970s offense has left the building.

Like a young
Mark Ingram, Coleman's talent outstrips his role in a crowded offense. The upright speedster believes he'll be
used more in 2018 after getting a career-high 183 touches a season ago. That should set Coleman up well, with free agency looming next offseason.

A fascinating, winding career for Lewis crested last season with 249 touches, including the playoffs, in his final 15 games. He still makes defenders miss like a video game simulacrum, but he showed a newfound toughness between the tackles. Last year's workload accounts for more than half of his touches since entering the league in 2011, so the only question is whether he can do it again.

One-thousand eighty-six yards from scrimmage, 80 catches and seven touchdowns is nothing to sneeze at, even if it looked unremarkable. McCaffrey has to prove he won't go down at first contact on inside runs, but the
Panthers still found a productive player who should only get better. Don't dismiss him just because he's not
Alvin Kamara.

I wondered a year ago if Ajayi would be durable enough -- and crazy enough -- to maintain his uber-masculine running style. He wound up being far less elusive in Miami and was banished to the eventual
Super Bowl champions after his commitment was questioned. His 48 touches in three playoff games should be a preview of his increasing role, but London's favorite son has the profile of a back who burns brightly early in his career before fading away.

There isn't a lot of wiggle or passing-game refinement in Henry's game, but
Dion Lewis' presence should balance out those shortcomings. Henry's profile is not unlike a younger version of his former teammate
DeMarco Murray, who was a load to tackle and liable to break a long one late in games, when defenders were sucking wind.

Passing-down backs have gone from useful role players to necessities. Someone like Johnson, who is second among all running backs with 127 catches over the last two years, has more value than a traditional thumper because of the play calls he opens up. Johnson has taken almost exactly half the
Browns' snaps since being drafted, an efficient producer on an inefficient offense.

Bernard's explosiveness was diminished early last season, when he was still recovering from ACL surgery. By the time he piled up 168 yards against Detroit in Week 16, the old Gio was back. He has underrated strength and is great on screens. The
Bengals should have one of the most dynamic tandems in football if they can improve their run blocking.

Some runners have great short-area quickness. Some just have pure straight-line speed. Cohen has both, with a low center of gravity that makes him difficult to tackle -- if the defense can locate him behind the line of scrimmage. New
Bears coach Matt Nagy should
utilize him in ways the previous regime didn't try.

Niners coach Kyle Shanahan is partly responsible for this ranking. If someone who knows the running game as well as Shanahan believes McKinnon is worth more than $11 million this season to be a primary runner, who am I to disagree? His legs are fresh entering his fifth season with only 474 career carries.

Four different offensive coordinators couldn't get the most out of Hyde, who seemed to drive coaches crazy by making a dazzling move one play and then a mental error on the next one. He was paid well in free agency, but he might wind up third on the
Browns depth chart behind rookie
Nick Chubb and
Duke Johnson.

It's remarkable that Collins couldn't make the
Seahawks in training camp last season. He wound up being the best player on the
Ravens' offense, consistently running through arm tackles on the way to 1,160 yards from scrimmage. NFL history is littered with big runners who had one season of brilliance -- hello, Samkon Gado -- so Collins still must prove he has staying power.

It's hard for Lynch to do anything quietly, but his 1,042 yards from scrimmage last season were quietly effective. Bizarrely blamed at times for the
Raiders' offensive downturn because he was new to the mix, Lynch gave Oakland his trademark effort, usually picking up more yards than were blocked for him.

Crowell has averaged nearly 200 rushes over the last three seasons, producing at a better-than-replacement-level clip. Availability is a skill at running back, and Crowell has yet to miss a game since emerging as an undrafted diamond in the rough for Cleveland.

He's a passing-down specialist, but a very good specialist. Riddick's outrageous receiving ability is one of the biggest reasons why
Matthew Stafford and the
Lions are one of the best teams at running a two-minute offense with the game on the line.

A broken leg short-circuited what was shaping up to be Thompson's best season in 2017. As long as he recovers well from the injury, he still figures to have a sizable role supporting rookie
Derrius Guice.

In 81 carries, Jones strung together enough impressive runs and grabs for me to believe he could be the best
Packers runner since
Eddie Lacy in his rookie season. Jones just needs to improve his blocking to stay on the field.

Only
Le'Veon Bell and
Duke Johnson have caught more passes over the last two seasons. And while the
Patriots don't hand the ball off to White much, they still trusted him with two of the biggest short-yardage carries in franchise history in
Super Bowl LI. He delivered on both of them, earning a new contract as a reward.